When I was working on s.223 in NC, I had QUITE a few people telling me that the bill HAD to get rid of voting machines, nothing else would be acceptable. I was told that unless I fought for hand counts only, I was betraying the movement.

Had I followed their advice, I would have failed in NC.

Reality check folks:

OpScan.is.here.to.stay!

We might be able to get rid of touchscreen, but OpScan is NOT going to disappear from mainstream American elections. I have talked to dozens of election officials SYMPATHETIC to our views, and they are happy to send TS systems packing, but mention mandatory hand-counted paper ballots and they go get damned hostile and explain the facts of life to you.

Since this is the reality, then we must take what measures we can to keep the game as honest as possible, set as many traps and safeguards as possible to catch/protect against tampering.

I listened to long diatribes from people in excruciating detail about how the GOP was rigging the game and that this was all part of their plan to rig elections nationwide. I was admonished for failing to bring this up again and again.

When I was on Fox's John Gibson show in 2003 I was attacked by some here for my failure to state outright that voting machines were rigged. Gibson himself tried to lead me down that path, and asked me if this was so. I answered that I did not know if that were the case, but as a computer systems engineer what I did know, and what was established fact was that the machines were insecure and easy to tamper with. Gibson had been prepared to deride me for taking a "whacko" viewpoint, instead I wound up getting to talk quite a bit about what was wrong with electronic voting machines. Had I followed people's advice and said the machines were rigged, I would have been savaged by Gibson, and discredited with the media and politicians.

Yet, when I was on the NC Select Committee on E-voting, I still had folks demanding I "blow the lid off the story" and use my position on the committee to "tell people the truth".

I'll ask you the same thing I asked them: Do you want a statement, or do you want a law? You can have one or the other, but not both. I have talked to a lot of reporters and politicians over the last four years, and on many occasions I saw people broach this subject with them. The person made polite noises to the advocate of this view, and after they had left, rolled their eyes and looked at me. I then had to do damage control to remind the politician/reporter of the hard evidence we had found and that these failures were resulting in people's loss of confidence on the electoral process.

Fortunately, this tactic worked.

NO MATTER WHAT *I* believe about elections, as soon as I start down that road with legislators and reporters my credibility is shot and I am effectively neutered. You can deal in fact, or you can deal in conjecture. Getting people to listen to fact is hard enough without wasting time on conjecture.

Let me explain it again for folks who are NOT getting the message: THE MAJORITY OF THE PEOPLE IN THE REAL WORLD OF POLITICS AND THE MEDIA DO NOT SUBSCRIBE TO THE VIEW THAT THERE IS A CONSPIRACY BETWEEN THE GOP AND VOTING MACHINE COMPANIES TO RIG ELECTIONS!

People who wander into their office espousing such view are politely thanked and relegated to the same category as people who believe that Alien Autopsy was real. If you are to have ANY chance for change, then you have to have the people in power's attention. If you don't, you will accomplish NOTHING!

There were things in our bill I wanted that I didn't get, but when it came down to the final wire, I could get a decent bill that had a few flaws, but lots of teeth, or a bill that was a complete sham. I chose the former, and goddamn if we didn't have to fight tooth and nail to get it passed.

And we did get it passed, UNANIMOUSLY, which some people then said was evidence the "fix was in".

Do you know how fucking frustrating it is to spend so much energy on an issue, to practically ruin your health, your business and your personal life and then to have people come along and ATTACK you for betraying them? To belittle your ethics, your integrity and your intelligence? To accuse you of working for Diebold/ES&S/Rove/Bush?

Do you understand the soul-crushing demoralization that inflicts?

HR-550 is NOT a perfect bill, but damn does it have some teeth! Rather than bitching and moaning about what may or may not happen as a result of the audit provision, you need to pass it before someone REALIZES how sharp those teeth are and starts watering it down.

After the bill is passed, you can work on the bills shortcomings in the state legislatures, or work on an amendment to the existing bill.

(Even MORE annoying is that so few people have actually READ the damn text of the law. You cannot have an informed opinion based on other people telling you what HR-550 says. You have to READ it for yourself, otherwise you run around making asinine statements about the bill "privatizing auditing").

Folks have REALLY got to get over this unrealistic MY WAY or else attitude. It doesn't fly in the real world for people with as little money and clout as we have.

And before someone accuses me of precisely that attitude, I will point out that I have no power to compel anyone to behave in any particular way, I can only try to persuade you using logic and reason. If you choose not to be persuaded, you can continue to oppose HR-550 and spoil its chances for passage.

Do you know what we have accomplished so far? Do you have any REAL idea? We have fought several multi-billion dollar corporations to a complete standstill. Better yet, we have actually defeated them in a number of states. And we did it with next to NO money, no clout, and no friends in the power structure.

Do you know how fucking rare that is? Do you know realize that this kind of accomplishment usually required weapons and bloodshed?

We have taken a subject that practically did not exist prior to 2002, and made it part of the public discussion (there are three quarters of a million articles on "black box voting" on the web, which staggers me, as I have never given birth to a meme before).

And just when we are on the crux of decisive victory, we have people attacking our main weapon, HR-550. People, most of whom have NOT passed a single anti-BBV law or gotten a law changed, are telling us that the law won't work, whereas people who HAVE gotten laws passed are behind it.

If you don't like HR-550, then go to your congressman and get him to write one for you that you do like, then get him to introduce it, then get out there and line up sponsors.

But if you are NOT going to do that, would it be to much to ask you to stop shitting on ours?

2. It would allow a high degree of false confidence; not working when needed

Edited on Fri Jul-21-06 10:37 AM by Land Shark

The pro-machine people will have such a long list of talking points (the Holt bill becomes their talking points as well) that trying to explain why FURTHER major reform is still needed will be almost impossible.

If you really think Holt is a step to getting rid of machines SOMEDAY, then your support of Holt is in bad faith (for an ulterior motive beyond the face of the bill itself). Maybe that's politics, but it's also a price that will have to be paid.

Strategically, it's better to have reality be more obvious, than it is to pass the pain reliever of Holt that puts america on massive pain killers and high on Confidence, because Holt is precisely named the "Voter Confidence...." act.

It's a dead end, killing field for democracy. As you know, i go around making arguments on this all the time. WillYourVoteBeCOunted suggests I argue the case on every issue way too much. I really really really don't like the available arguments after Holt is passed. They are much weaker.

I've never received an answer as to what are our "killer" arguments for Step Two: Post Holt? Can you answer that?

on edit: My county got rid of Sequoia DREs by vote of the county council January 4, 2006. My lawsuit was one factor in that. This proves that PUBLIC FOCUS results in dumping DREs (other factors feed into that focus too, of course). Why can't we just work on PUBLIC FOCUS?? There are other successes around the country besides the one you cite.

32. there are very few NEW laws needed; litigation recognizes invalidity

of the present electronic voting system. Once it's gone, what are "paper trails" for? Asking for laws is putting the people on their knees when they are supposed to control the government and elections are the very process by which the government gets it's legitimacy. SO much begging is very bad for real democracy.

57. Will there be HCPB in Snohomish? What about the 3000 other counties?

Edited on Fri Jul-21-06 03:49 PM by Bill Bored

LS, I'm glad they got rid of DREs in your county. They are a bad idea whose time to go has come!

But optical scanners are not much better when it comes to the ability of insiders to rig elections. So we need auditing, which is just another way of saying hand counting. The only question is how much and who will do it?

Holt is one possible solution. It's not an adequate one, but it can be improved and combined with others to come up with something adequate. This won't happen by totally gutting the bill.

Holt must also be looked at in the context of what's available at the state level. Holt auditing is in addition to state auditing. The fact that it's federal may help in some states where there is no auditing, no bi-partisan election administration, etc.

It won't hurt in states where there is already auditing and fair election administration. It can be used to come up with a more accurate picture of what's going on in those states. For example a 2% Holt audit and a 3% state audit, the results of which can be combined, could be the equivalent of a 5% audit, and while that's not sufficient to confirm the outcome of EVERY race on the ballot, even the 2% audit can confirm some races. A lot of statewide races in fact. That doesn't mean we shouldn't audit US House races, or local races, or close statewide races, enough to confirm their outcomes. On the contrary!

Holt removes proprietary software from voting systems. What is also needed is a way to authenticate the software that's running. This is where voting system standards come in and there could be legislation to require those standards to actually be met. Maybe it could even be part of Holt? This is one reason why Holt removes the EAC's exemption from competitive bidding. The EAC writes our voting system standards and the vetting process for this was NOT put out for public bidding because HAVA exempted the EAC from having to do so. So we have cronyism.

The repeal of this exemption has somehow been spun into "privatization of auditing" and I agree that the Holt loyalists are making a BIG mistake by not addressing this flaw, because I don't think it is the intention of the bill. I do fault them for not coming forward and admitting that this is a mistake -- an unintended consequence -- and that it needs to be corrected by Holt ASAP. They are being Bush-like for not addressing this and we have enough of that in the Executive branch. They need to fix this and soon -- but gutting the bill won't solve anything.

Mulder and Holt have other bills in the works if the Dems get the Congress back that you would probably not have a problem with. Would you object to transparent aggregation of precinct totals for example? (See DNC Ohio report Sec. VIII.) I doubt it.

I'd love to improve Holt before it passes, if it passes, but what I've seen so far from the anti-Holt contingent is an apparent desire to gut the bill. I don't think this is the way to go.

So how do we move forward?

As far as post-Holt killer arguments, that's easy:

If the Holt audit and state audits are mathematically or otherwise unable to confirm the outcome of ANY race on the ballot, more auditing is required, and again, auditing is just another word for hand counts.

You see Holt as some kind of limit on auditing. Others see it as the tip of the auditing iceberg. It depends on what WE as activists do next, doesn't it? We have a crappy election system now, and even where hand counts are possible, we don't always get them. Holt will at least mandate some.

The post-Holt argument is already in the works, even by some proponents of Holt. If you think there will be a "PR" problem with that, I'd suggest you join forces with those who are working with what media they have access to, to get the word out and propose better alternatives to Holt, some of which may still even be included in the bill once it's in committee. I hope you haven't burnt any bridges though because for the life of me, I can't imagine why you would want to do that.

I will lead off with WINvote, because they are PROUD of their wireless features:

The WINvote Wireless Touch Screen Voting System is manufactured by Advanced Voting Solutions. The AVS leadership team has decades of elections experience, successfully implementing and supporting hundreds of elections for millions of voters nationwide.

The WINvote uses secure wireless technology that loads all the county's ballots to all the units within minutes. This feature is designed to save the county significant resources and election preparation time. The WINvote also features wireless ballot activation and wireless ballot accumulation, designed to ease the burden on poll workers and voters. The wireless ballot activation means the voter simply touches the screen to activate the ballot. The wireless ballot accumulation feature means the poll workers simply touches one screen to accumulate all the totals at the precinct and send the results to the elections office http://www.advancedvoting.com/index.php?p=Voting+System

Diebold's Wireless Woes

Election season is officially underway, and with it new concerns are being raised about Diebold Election Systems' electronic voting machines. While California authorities consider action against the company for violating voting-certification policies, computer scientists are now worried that Diebold's AccuVote TSx machines, which can connect to Wi-Fi networks, could make it easy for unauthorized personnel to manipulate voting results. With security of paramount importance, this revelation could hurt Diebold's chances of getting its systems government approval for use in the upcoming presidential election.http://business2.blogs.com/business2blog/2004/01/diebol...

iVotronic and the documentation the iVotronic is wireless as a standard, built-in feature:

"The Model 100 comes equipped with dual PCMCIA slots, an optional wireless modem for transmitting results, two exterman serial prots and one parallel port allowing the connection of a wide array of external components."

3. airplanes will never fly. the earth is flat. paper ballots = impossible

hr-550 can be seen as one step along the path or the end of the road where nothing else is possible.good thing dorothy didn't quit or she'd still be in OZ.

all of us who value honest elections are doing our part, thanks for doing yours.

we have lots of time in this country to sit around and count paper ballots and votes. the arguments against it are self serving on the part of county registrars who like going to those machine-sponsored conventions where they are made to feel bigger and better than the citizens they serve. the media can wait. the candidates can wait, what's another few days?

counting ballots is not that difficult at the precinct level. one does not have to deliver every ballot cast in California to ONE warehouse to be counted en masse.

It is not the cure all one would hope for. And it takes huge amounts of man-hours which means money most areas do not have.

Better to go for scanned ballots, which at least exist outside of a computer's memory and can be recounted if need be.

Thinking that hand counting would assure an honest election is just ignoring history. Old 'political machines' were made of people if I recall. Get enough of one side hand counting the ballots and it wasn't up to the voters anymore.

Want honest and accurate? Make sure the people running the entire voting and counting process are more concerned with democracy than with ideology. That means more folks have to be actively involved with how things are done in their areas.

Democracy is not a spectator sport. Americans have to be involved or bad people take the reins.

not the presence of absence of paper or cellulose. (the ballots could as well be plastic, metal, wood, pottery, etc.) So anytime you have paper without checks and balances, sure you can have problems there too. That proves only the importance of checks and balances.

You can't check and balance electrons. You can't check and balance computers who by their very nature do as they are told without regard to law, ethics or morality. Computers can process votes when they are afraid to go to jail, and not before then. (It's DIFFERENT than a mechanical machine, where, if it properly counts the day before election it is highly likely to count properly on the day OF election. Not so with computers, all depends on what they're told)

I rather like the optical scanned ballots. But there are too few people in my present location to make them possible.

When I work to help hand count the paper ballots, I am the only DEM in the building! Gee, wonder how they would be tallying things if I wasn't there keeping an eye on the reading of ballots and tallying of the votes!

I believe, is the wave of the futurethe issues everyone has with it is1 that its being run by people with a serious conflict of itrests (diebold)and2 that the very serious and very real security concerns are not only not being addressed, they're being dissmissed as comspiracy theroy!

I myself will not vote on one of these machines until it can be proven, by someone with no influence of a particular party, that these macines are kosher

Conclusion of Kelvin Mace (see reply to a post of mine above): Electronic machines are here to stay.

You mean, in the world's most important democracy and richest nation, we are HELPLESS TO RESIST "real, demonstrable and reproducible" security problems? We must simply take baby steps back, but never ALL the way?

Those counting devices that click a tally mark for the marks you put in a card are electronic machines. They ARE NOT the same as Diebold-type voting computers with modems any fair hacker could get into and program to spit out specific results.

A toaster is an electronic machine, but can't steal an election.

We have to deal with the reality of huge populations - huge quantities of ballots and the fact that elections with hand counted paper ballots were only as reliable as the party machine counting those ballots

Optical counters have no ideology. The fewer times ballots are handled by people, the more likely the count is to be accurate.

that most poeople understand. It is EASY to check for accuracy with a hand count. TS, with no paper ballots is IMPOSSIBLE to check. NC s.223 outlaws paperless TS systems in NC, and HR-550 outlaws them NATIONWIDE.

Landshark and his supporters seem to be saying either the law will have our audit procedure, or we prefer NO law. If we don't get our view of how audits must be conducted we are prepared to sacrifice prohibitions against internet voting, wireless voting, paperless voting, conflict of interest in testing labs, and mandatory disclosure of voting machine code FOR THE ENTIRE NATION.

16. I would like to know when it became acceptable to privatize the election

process. Who said this was a good idea, and when was it decided? The process of voting in this country is a fundamental right that goes to the very core of our democracy. Who had the brilliant idea that it was OK to privatize this process, and allow corporations to build equipment with secret technology to track and report the votes?

The voting process must be completely removed from the control of private interests, and brought back into a government or state function, with transparency, mandatory random audits, and a bipartisan panel to oversee the process.

No wonder our elections are such a joke. We have equipment that we can't control, doing who the hell knows what with our votes, because the technology is privileged information. We have state election officials heading up campaigns, or serving as party officials. Can you say CONFLICT OF INTEREST?

This is just another example of our government controlling us, instead of representing us. The American people need to put their foot down and tell them enough is enough. And then vote those out who don't do as we want. Of course, with the voting process we have now, we can never be sure that's an option, since we can't trust what the machines are doing.

I appreciate any action that moves our voting process away from private corporations and gives it more transparency. We just all have to recognize how very important this issue really is.

And for the record, I don't believe Alien Autopsy was real, but I do believe our elections are being manipulated. Not all of them, but some of the important ones are certainly worthy of further scrutiny. You can't have the CEO of Diebold go on record as promising to deliver the win to the GOP without questioning why he would say such a thing.

I am simply telling you how this is viewed by the power structure in politics and media. This is just how it is.

Using an OpScanner to count paper ballots, then randomly auditing a statistically significant number of ballots after the election is a pretty good way to insure accuracy of elections.

I HATE to point this out, but such machines generally DO a better job of counting than humans. They don't get tired, or, (as long as I can check the counting code) have a political agenda. They are also much faster.

This type of system is not, in my opinion, privatizing the vote.

The issue is TOTALLY different when you bring in TS systems. The actual recording of the vote and counting thereof is done SECRETLY and OPAQUELY. You can't have ANY meaningful check of the system's accuracy unless paper is involved and there is a mechanism in place that requires comparing paper to electrons.

In this case, lacking these safeguard, the vote HAS been privatized and we should all raise holy Hell up to, and including, rioting in the streets if need be, to restore the vote to the people.

Includes Opscan ballots - as high a proportion hand counted as possible.

Voter uses pencil to mark Opscan Ballot and then puts it in scanner. Scanner shows on a screen how it registers the votes. If there are overvotes - stray marks on the paper, incomplete erasure - then the scanner spits the ballot back out and the voter gets a new ballot. If there are undervotes, the voter is warned.

THIS CORRECTS PROBLEMS that can occur with plan paper ballots: With plain paper ballots people sometimes make mistakes or double-mark and then battles ensue between Dem and Rep counting ballots by hand.

The Opscan ballot reader ensures that the ballot is "clean" - it can be read by scanner or by the human eye.

As great a % can be hand counted as you can manage to put in law and to staff. I am all for hand counting as high a percentage as possible. As long as there is adequate ballot security the ballots can be counted over time as needed.

And OpScan DIGITAL VOTE PROCESSING SYSTEMS are here to stay - GET USED TO IT! (At least you didn't tell us how much better OpScans are!)

And we can't hand count paper because there aren't enough Republicans who know how to count (OK, you didn't say this; its responding to something from Joyce's post).

And the unelected RNC-controlled Congress will gleefully pass HR 550 unaltered in all its toothiness because its good for America and protects the integrity of our vote.

And then we can spend all our time lobbying this great Congress for more Federal legislation (would that be HAVA I, Amendment B?) to fix the fabulous HR 550 (a.k.a., HAVA I, Amendment A).

And hand counting 2 votes out of every 100 to ensure 4 or 5 of those 100 weren't flipped digitally will ensure our elections are safe, secure and accurate.

And we all must not tell the truth of our stolen elections because people don't want to hear it and will attack us and call us names (Oh, and if we keep the truth to ourselves, they'll let us say lots cool stuff on FOX News!).

And besides, we shouldn't say the elections have been stolen because the politicians and the media don't believe it.

And if we haven't gotten laws passed, we're pieces of shit and should shut up because we're IGNORANT pieces of shit (OK, you didn't say "shit". You did say "fucking" though).

And without the life-shattering sacrifice of one person, no one would know about the problems with our voting systems (After all, he gave birth to the meme) and we'd be voting via black box digital vote processing systems forever more.

I get it. I'll go back to my normal life now, assured our democracy is secure and our future bright.(God! I sound like the damn Freepers here on ER. I apologize for that but David's post REALLY got to me)

1) There is NOTHING in 550 to stop you from hand-counting your ballots. Just persuade your city/county/state to do so, and you are all set. If you think you can pass a law that will require the entire nation count its ballots by hand, then don't let me inject reality into your dream.

2) You don't have to lobby congress to address any flaws you see in the bill as to auditing. States are perfectly free to establish stricter standards.

3) As to counting 2 our of every 100 votes, exit polling is very accurate and relies on similar samples, Don't bitch to me, talk to the statisticians.

4) Again, I ask you if you want to make a statement or get a law passed. Attacking me and insinuating I like Fox news is pretty goddamned low, and very much the kind of thing that makes me wonder why the fuck I bother with this shit at all, since other people know SO MUCH MORE than I do.

5) If you want to run around and tell people all about how the elections are rigged and Karl Rove has a secret deal with Wally O'Dell, then by all means, do so. I am explaining that if you do, you will be ignored. If you wish to be ignored by the people you are trying to convince, then knock yourself out.

6) At no point did I call anyone ignorant. If you want to change the law, then pick up the phone, fire up the FAX, write some emails, wear out some shoe leather. That is how it is done in the real world.

7) As to my part in this, I can only speak for myself. For some reason this offends you and you choose to belittle what I have to say and mock what I have spent four years of my life doing.

By all means, have a laugh and enjoy yourself. I will sit back and wait for your august views and leadership on the matter.

and congratulations on all you have achieved. I am impressed with HR550.

But I have to comment on your point 3 (of course).

How accurately a sample reflects the whole (a 'population' in stats-speak):

DOES NOT depend on the proportion sampled, but on the size of the sample. 2 votes out of 100 would tell you nothing. 200 votes out of 10,000 would tell you a heck of a lot.

DOES depend on the sample being random. Exit polls are not random samples, nor were the precincts sampled for the recount in Ohio.

To be confident that an audited sample reflected the whole, it therefore has to be random and it has to have a certain size. For large units of analysis, 2% of the vote will give you an adequate sample size, but for small units (like precincts) it won't.

(And the crucial issue with the exit polls is the extent to which they were random- evidence suggests not, although the sample size was just fine....)

and participating in lobbying for HR550 this spring, I completely agree with what Kelvin wrote. I don't understand why passing HR550 will stop other activists from pursuing their goals of hand counted paper ballots only or other solutions through legal remedies. The argument that once the bill passes then everyone will believe that voting will have been fixed has some merit but not enough to discourage me from trying to pass this bill. As Kelvin has mentioned, everyone is focusing on the inadequacies of the audit portion of the bill. But what about the fact that this bill would require all of the software to be accessible? Wouldn't this provision of the bill be invaluable to computer experts who are trying to prove that machine fraud took place? The provision of the bill requiring paper records for all votes cast would be a huge upgrade in states like Maryland and Georgia. While the bill is not perfect it provides requirements that many states are avoiding.

If you believe that there should be no machines and only hand counted paper ballots, please work to propose this type of legislation. As an ex auditor, I believe that precinct based optical scan, with adequate audit provisions, is the best voting system available at this time. I would like to see all DREs banned by a federal law and I would work to get some type of legislation banning these voting machines passed at the state or federal level. However, if HR550 passes, I don't believe that it will hurt a movement that tries to ban DREs. The push for HR550, and for almost all of the other activities that are taking place regarding election reform, is being done by dedicated activists who are well informed about voting machines. I do not believe that these activists are going to stop fighting to improve the election process if HR550 passes.

Finally, everyone who does not believe in HR550 should use their energy to pursue the remedies that they believe will be the most effective instead of knocking HR550 and those who support it. This would be a much better use of your time and talent if your goal is too fix our broken election system.

On one side are those who think privately owned machines can be made to produce an accurate count. The operative word is "can be made to". They think that 550 will enforce that mantra "can be made to."------------------------

On the other side are those who think that the invisible hand of the private companies needs to be cut off completely. And that 550 tends to codify and strengthen that invisible hand.

Yes, we think the machines should be tossed into Boston Harbor. We don't trust the same bought congress who gave us HAVA to release that privatized control over how our votes are counted. --------------------

Having said that, if there is a machine that the experts can recommend to everyone, lets hear about that machine. I have yet to hear of one vendor who has the confidence of the leaders.

Since no machine has thus far appeared, the rest of us can't accept the idea of allowing the invisible hand anymore power.

It is about whether you want more private control, or more open, public control, over how the votes are counted.

53. So you think that we are better off without the ability to review the

code? This step alone does not assure that every machine will function properly but it will help to detect the problems within the machines that have faulty counts. My point is that I don't believe that this bill makes these machines more usable, rather it will help detect more problems with DREs which will help us get rid of them.

But in reality it is just lipstick on a pig. The problem is, as I have noted, the code can not be examined on every machine.

Getting rid of DREs is one good thing that could come out of 550.

Know that I used to be all in favor of 550, but that was when I was somewhat ignorant of all the ramifications. Now I see that until there is a working, well designed, and nearly foolproof machine, I can not condone the idea of using any such thing to count my vote.

But if I go along with 550 then it would appear that I think Diebold, et al, can be reformed and all will be fine; I know better than that.

a mathematical checksum can be generated from the code which can be checked in EACH machine on election day, These checksums CANNOT be forged. Change a single comma in the code and the checksum value changes.

Again, you prefer to trust tens of thousands of people, rather than vetted machines.

86. My credentials are established for those who bother to look for them

Edited on Sat Jul-22-06 11:20 AM by Kelvin Mace

but since you asked, I have been a computer systems engineer for about 12 years. I have taught about, built, repaired, and installed computers for over 18 years. My writing on computers, tech, Internet issues and such have appeared in local, regional and national publications (ESP, Triad Style, Internet Underground, Eye Magazine, .Net, plus that book with Bev what-her-name) I wrote a weekly tech column for the local paper for two years. I have been installing networks and repairing PCs since 1986. I hold credentials from Microsoft (MCSE, MCP) Compaq (ASE), HP (various equipment specific certs) CompTIA (A+), and Software Publishers Assoc (CSM). For eight years I worked for a company which wrote loan software for banks and I am quite familiar with the security protocols of banks. I also served on the NC Select Committee on E-Voting, which drafted S.223, the Public Confidence in Voting Act for the state of NC.

Happy now? You have been on this board how long and have never bothered chech my bona fides?

Checksum authentication has been used for years in banks, anti-virus software, Linux, Windows and Mac OS. It is a STANDARD security procedeure.

I am a layman. I have a drivers license, that about it. I taught myself computers and how to type in the last 5 years. I have been following stolen elections for 15.

I am the most free person you might ever meet, that's what my friends say about me, hence this screen name.

I don't trust computers to count my vote, and nothing you have ever said about them has convinced me to change my mind. However, if you can tell me of one machne you can stake your reputation on, I will checksum it. K?

You are now telling me that your experience as a self-professed layman trumps my experience working with computers? This is no different than George Bush insisting he knows more than biologists and geneticists on topics such as evolution and stem cell research.

Ironically, I routinely am told by clueless election officials that they, people with NO computer experience, have complete faith in paperless voting system, and that my experience with computers to the contrary is not germane.

Yeah, can you imagine a computer idiot like me questioning the 'authority'?

Well, son, from computer experts besides yourself, is where I get my knowledge. And nearly all of them say there is not one computer they would trust to count votes. Nothing you have said convinces me otherwise.

When we have true reform of the system all these things will fall into place.

With the current system that is designed to exclude people from activities and make privatization and machinery the core elements with big money controlling everything else, the naivety that plays into that system will be/is the death of democracy.

I am amazed that I have to ask this question on a forum that routinely accuses posters of working for Karl Rove.

Do you think the GOP is going to allow all Dem counters? So, now we must have an equal number of GOP counters, and Libertarian counters, and suddenly our head count has tripled to 90,000 people. And by the way I consider 30,000 LOW for the task of counting 100,000,000 ballots. That works out to 3,333 ballots per counter, triple the size of your average precinct. A more realistic number would be 80,000 counters throughout the country counting, handling 1250 ballots each. This means that once the GOP and the minor partis get invovled, we are fielding 240,000 people to count ballots.

and is checked post-election for accuracy and fraud will outperform people every time with this volume of ballots.

Please provide proof that 240,000 people are going to produce a more accurate count than the machines. Please explain how you will vette these people, a question you keep dodging. Claims that this is common sense doen't count. Common sense says a lot of things according to some folks that just.aren't.true.

You tell me these roughly quarter of a million souls will count accurately and will be 100% honest. Where is your proof?

OpScan technology is a very mature, very well proven technology. With the safeguards outlined in my state's law and in 550, I have a high degree of confidence in the acuracy and honesty of an election so conducted.

I understand and agree with your fundamental points, and I appreciate immensely what you've accomplished and your continuing efforts.

I'm glad you're standing up to the crap-throwers. I know it gets really frustrating, but it's folks like you who are willing to take ground inch by inch if necessary, who will really make the progress on this issue.

35. all well and good . . . let's support the bill, get it passed . . but . .

if this statement is accurate:

THE MAJORITY OF THE PEOPLE IN THE REAL WORLD OF POLITICS AND THE MEDIA DO NOT SUBSCRIBE TO THE VIEW THAT THERE IS A CONSPIRACY BETWEEN THE GOP AND VOTING MACHINE COMPANIES TO RIG ELECTIONS!

then we still have a real problem . . . because I've seen enough evidence that points precisely in that direction that I, personally, believe that there indeed IS a conspiracy . . . and it's existed since at least the 2000 elections . . . and that it will likely determine the outcome of the 2006 and 2008 elections . . .

if, despite "common knowledge" in political and media circles (both of which have such exemplary records for telling the truth), there indeed IS a conspiracy, what we're talking about here is nothing less than THE TRUTH . . . and once we start ignoring THE TRUTH for political expediency, we don't have much of anything left . . .

People can argue about exit polling data forever, but you are NOT going to convict anyone or overturn a single election based on exit polling.

I have high standards for the use of the word "conspiracy", and again, while there is much to make me very curious, there is damned little concrete evidence.

Could the evidence be found? Sure, all we need is subpoena power and a battalion of FBI agents. With that, if there were real evidence, we would have a decent chance of finding it.

What passes for evidence on this board and what IS evidence in court and in the halls of power are different animals.

No one should EVER stop pursuing the truth, but we have limited time and every more limited resources. The choice is to try and prove what I have no evidence for, or prove what I have concrete, irrefutable facts about, i.e. DRE software is insecure, poorly written and highly prone to tampering.

so did the head of my elections office when I discussed it with her. She is adamantly opposed to anything but paper ballots, optiscan, large random handcounts, auditing and inviting & welcoming citizen observers throughout the process. She told me as well, that if a citizen calls and has a problem with a particular precinct, they'll hand recount that one too.

She also thinks the "all hand count" people are crackpots (that it is an utter impossibility and will never happen). She says it makes it HARDER for her in working to convince her peers to dump the touchscreens.

and we have relatively small precincts, according to what I've seen posted here at DU.

It's a damned long day from 6:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. or later as it is. I am the only member of my election board who has what I consider a "real", traditional job, where I have to be up again at 6 am the next day to go back to it. The others' situations vary from working part time, to working in a family business, to working for the county who get the day off and are accomodated for supporting Election Day.

By 9 pm I don't know how the hell we'd hand count 600-800 or more ballots with several races and usually ballot questions too. So...would the plan be to bring in a fresh team to do the counting, while the original board members remained as observors to satisfy the chain of custody? How would a county like mine, that can barely (and more often, not) staff all the precincts with Dems to counteract the repubs, find that many MORE people to participate in a count? And we're not even as overwhelmingly republican as we used to be.

I tend to agree with your elections office head that this will never happen. I can dream of a utopia where everyone would get Election Day off from work and use it to help with the elections instead of going to the beach or the mountains...but if Americans were that civic-minded, they'd have paid just a smidgin more attention in 2004 and a lot fewer of them would have been bamboozled into voting for idiot frat boy.

how many of them work at, or have worked at, the polls as election board members?

I'm open-minded to the possibility that there may be a different way to run the polls that would make hand counting ballots feasible. But it seems those arguing for HCPB almost always merely ignore or discount the problem. And that's not the way to win respect for your position with people who actually DO this work.

I have worked a couple of election, the most recent being the NC primary. I just love armchair theorists. Reminds me of all those brilliant military leaders in Freeperland who tell us how close to victory we are in Iraq.

It's easy (relatively) to just put your name on a bill that the world isn't paying any attention to.

Kerry has been all over the not-so-mainstream media, like Stephanie Miller and Ed Schultz, talking about it, and in various speeches he has brought it up. I am less attuned to what Boxer is doing now but she will always get credit for contesting the certification of the 2004 (s)election. I am sure there are others too.

*Rules on getting legislation out of committee: It's called a discharge petition. If a bill is co-sponsored by more than half the House members (218) it can be brought directly to the floor by-passing committee.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discharge_petition

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